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United Press International
http://www.washtimes.com/upi-breaking/20050222-072936-1680r.htm

FBI abandons whistleblower secrets claim
    By Shaun Waterman  22 February 2005

Washington, DC, Feb. 22 (UPI) -- The Department of Justice has abandoned
its claim that allegations made by a fired FBI translator are secret,
paving the way for a court case that will air embarrassing allegations
about incompetence, poor security and possible espionage in the
translation unit of the Bureau's Washington Field Office.

At issue are the claims of Sibel Edmonds, a contract translator for the
FBI hired in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

Edmonds reported that many of those hired to work in the unit could barely
speak English; that they left secure laptop computers lying around while
they went to lunch; that they took classified material home with them; and
-- even more disturbing -- that one co-worker had undeclared contacts with
a foreign organization that was under FBI surveillance.

She said bureau operations -- including counter-terror ones -- were
compromised as a result.

Edmonds is suing the FBI, claiming she was fired for bringing to light
these problems -- which have been identified by several inquiries as
significant contributing factors to the success of the Sept. 11 plot.

The Bureau has repeatedly tried to have the case thrown out, claiming that
it cannot be heard without jeopardizing national security.

In two unclassified briefings for congressional staff in June and July
2002 senior FBI officials acknowledged the truth of a number of Edmonds'
allegations, including those against a co-worker, Melek Can Dickerson, who
had worked for an organization that was the target of surveillance in a
counter-intelligence probe until she joined the bureau in October 2001 --
and did not disclose the work on her application.

According to congressional staffers, bureau officials also said that
Dickerson had a continuing relationship with at least two individuals who
were surveillance targets in the probe. They acknowledged that Dickerson
had either mistranslated or incorrectly marked "not pertinent" hundreds of
telephone conversations recorded as part of the investigation and had
tried to ensure that she was given responsibility for translating all the
"take" from surveillance of that group of targets.

They said the FBI saw these as training issues.

Sens. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, wrote letters
laying out Edmonds' allegations to the Department of Justice inspector
general. The letters were released to the press and put on the senators'
Web sites.

Then in April 2004, in response to a court request to produce the
documents on which those briefings were based, the FBI said it now
regarded much of the material discussed there as classified, and asserted
the rarely used "state secrets privilege" to claim that Edmonds' case
could not be heard.

"The timing of this strongly suggests that it was a litigation strategy,"
said Michael Kirkpatrick, an attorney with the watchdog group Public
Citizen, which sued the FBI to obtain the release of the documents. "There
was never any indication that this information was secret until the court
ordered it handed over. This was done to gain a litigation advantage (for
the department) and to shield them from embarrassment and congressional
scrutiny."

Last week the Bureau withdrew its claim about the congressional briefings.
"We have stated that the information in those (letters from Sens. Leahy
and Grassley) is ... not classified," Justice Department spokesman Charles
Miller told United Press International Tuesday evening.

He declined to say what effect this might have on the department's
assertion of the "state secrets privilege" but added that the department's
lawyers would be filing papers in the case on Thursday that might make its
position clearer.

But the ACLU, which has since joined Edmonds' case, said that the collapse
of the claim that the briefings were secret was a huge blow to the Justice
Department's efforts to keep the case out of court.

"I do not see how they can continue to claim with a straight face that
this case cannot go forward now that so much information about her
allegations is in the public domain," ACLU attorney Ann Beeson told UPI.

Kirkpatrick said it would have been hard to maintain that Edmonds'
allegations were secret, in part because of the release last month of an
executive summary of a report by the department's inspector general.

The inspector general found that the FBI had failed to "adequately
investigate" Edmonds' allegations, many of which "had bases in fact."

Most seriously, the report found, the bureau conducted only a
"superficial" investigation of Edwards' most disturbing allegations --
those against Dickerson.

Beeson said that the report -- which found that retaliation was "in fact,
the most significant factor in the FBI's decision to terminate (Edmonds')
services" -- "basically proves her case."

"They will immediately have to concede some of the central issues," she
said of the Justice Department lawyers.

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